LDAP is often used by organizations as a central repository for user information and as an authentication service. It can also be used to store the role information for application users.
There are many different scenarios for how an LDAP server may be configured so Spring Security's LDAP provider is fully configurable. It uses separate strategy interfaces for authentication and role retrieval and provides default implementations which can be configured to handle a wide range of situations.
You should be familiar with LDAP before trying to use it with Spring Security. The
following link provides a good introduction to the concepts involved and a guide to
setting up a directory using the free LDAP server OpenLDAP: http://www.zytrax.com/books/ldap/
.
Some familiarity with the JNDI APIs used to access LDAP from Java may also be useful. We
don't use any third-party LDAP libraries (Mozilla, JLDAP etc.) in the LDAP provider, but
extensive use is made of Spring LDAP, so some familiarity with that project may be
useful if you plan on adding your own customizations.
When using LDAP authentication, it is important to ensure that you configure LDAP connection
pooling properly. If you are unfamiliar with how to do this, you can refer to the
Java LDAP
documentation
.
LDAP authentication in Spring Security can be roughly divided into the following stages.
Obtaining the unique LDAP “Distinguished Name”, or DN, from the
login name. This will often mean performing a search in the directory, unless
the exact mapping of usernames to DNs is known in advance. So a user might enter
the name “joe” when logging in, but the actual name used to
authenticate to LDAP will be the full DN, such as
uid=joe,ou=users,dc=springsource,dc=com
.
Authenticating the user, either by “binding” as that user or by performing a remote “compare” operation of the user's password against the password attribute in the directory entry for the DN.
Loading the list of authorities for the user.
The exception is when the LDAP directory is just being used to retrieve user information and authenticate against it locally. This may not be possible as directories are often set up with limited read access for attributes such as user passwords.
We will look at some configuration scenarios below. For full information on available configuration options, please consult the security namespace schema (information from which should be available in your XML editor).
The first thing you need to do is configure the server against which authentication
should take place. This is done using the <ldap-server>
element
from the security namespace. This can be configured to point at an external LDAP server,
using the url
attribute:
<ldap-server url="ldap://springframework.org:389/dc=springframework,dc=org" />
The <ldap-server>
element can also be used to create an
embedded server, which can be very useful for testing and demonstrations. In this
case you use it without the url
attribute:
<ldap-server root="dc=springframework,dc=org"/>
Here we've specified that the root DIT of the directory should be
“dc=springframework,dc=org”, which is the default. Used this way, the
namespace parser will create an embedded Apache Directory server and scan the
classpath for any LDIF files, which it will attempt to load into the server. You can
customize this behaviour using the ldif
attribute, which defines
an LDIF resource to be loaded:
<ldap-server ldif="classpath:users.ldif" />
This makes it a lot easier to get up and running with LDAP, since it can be inconvenient to work all the time with an external server. It also insulates the user from the complex bean configuration needed to wire up an Apache Directory server. Using plain Spring Beans the configuration would be much more cluttered. You must have the necessary Apache Directory dependency jars available for your application to use. These can be obtained from the LDAP sample application.
This is the most common LDAP authentication scenario.
<ldap-authentication-provider user-dn-pattern="uid={0},ou=people"/>
This simple example would obtain the DN for the user by substituting the user login name in the supplied pattern and attempting to bind as that user with the login password. This is OK if all your users are stored under a single node in the directory. If instead you wished to configure an LDAP search filter to locate the user, you could use the following:
<ldap-authentication-provider user-search-filter="(uid={0})" user-search-base="ou=people"/>
If used with the server definition above, this would
perform a search under the DN ou=people,dc=springframework,dc=org
using the value of the user-search-filter
attribute as a filter.
Again the user login name is substituted for the parameter in the filter name, so it
will search for an entry with the uid
attribute equal to the user
name. If user-search-base
isn't supplied, the search will be
performed from the root.
How authorities are loaded from groups in the LDAP directory is controlled by the following attributes.
group-search-base
. Defines the part of the directory
tree under which group searches should be performed.
group-role-attribute
. The attribute which contains the
name of the authority defined by the group entry. Defaults to
cn
group-search-filter
. The filter which is used to
search for group membership. The default is
uniqueMember={0}
, corresponding to the
groupOfUniqueNames
LDAP class [23].
In this case, the substituted parameter is the full distinguished name
of the user. The parameter {1}
can be used if you
want to filter on the login name.
So if we used the following configuration
<ldap-authentication-provider user-dn-pattern="uid={0},ou=people" group-search-base="ou=groups" />
and authenticated successfully as user “ben”, the subsequent
loading of authorities would perform a search under the directory entry
ou=groups,dc=springframework,dc=org
, looking for entries which
contain the attribute uniqueMember
with value
uid=ben,ou=people,dc=springframework,dc=org
. By default the
authority names will have the prefix ROLE_
prepended. You can
change this using the role-prefix
attribute. If you don't want
any prefix, use role-prefix="none"
. For more information on
loading authorities, see the Javadoc for the
DefaultLdapAuthoritiesPopulator
class.
The namespace configuration options we've used above are simple to use and much more concise than using Spring beans explicitly. There are situations when you may need to know how to configure Spring Security LDAP directly in your application context. You may wish to customize the behaviour of some of the classes, for example. If you're happy using namespace configuration then you can skip this section and the next one.
The main LDAP provider class, LdapAuthenticationProvider
,
doesn't actually do much itself but delegates the work to two other beans, an
LdapAuthenticator
and an
LdapAuthoritiesPopulator
which are responsible for
authenticating the user and retrieving the user's set of
GrantedAuthority
s respectively.
The authenticator is also responsible for retrieving any required user attributes. This is because the permissions on the attributes may depend on the type of authentication being used. For example, if binding as the user, it may be necessary to read them with the user's own permissions.
There are currently two authentication strategies supplied with Spring Security:
Authentication directly to the LDAP server ("bind" authentication).
Password comparison, where the password supplied by the user is compared with the one stored in the repository. This can either be done by retrieving the value of the password attribute and checking it locally or by performing an LDAP "compare" operation, where the supplied password is passed to the server for comparison and the real password value is never retrieved.
Before it is possible to authenticate a user (by either strategy), the
distinguished name (DN) has to be obtained from the login name supplied to the
application. This can be done either by simple pattern-matching (by setting the
setUserDnPatterns array property) or by setting the
userSearch property. For the DN pattern-matching approach,
a standard Java pattern format is used, and the login name will be substituted
for the parameter {0}
. The pattern should be relative to
the DN that the configured
SpringSecurityContextSource
will bind to (see the
section on connecting to the LDAP
server for more information on this). For example, if you are using an
LDAP server with the URL
ldap://monkeymachine.co.uk/dc=springframework,dc=org
, and
have a pattern uid={0},ou=greatapes
, then a login name of
"gorilla" will map to a DN
uid=gorilla,ou=greatapes,dc=springframework,dc=org
. Each
configured DN pattern will be tried in turn until a match is found. For
information on using a search, see the section on search objects below. A combination of the
two approaches can also be used - the patterns will be checked first and if no
matching DN is found, the search will be used.
The class BindAuthenticator
in the package
org.springframework.security.ldap.authentication
implements
the bind authentication strategy. It simply attempts to bind as the user.
The beans discussed above have to be able to connect to the server. They both have
to be supplied with a SpringSecurityContextSource
which is an extension of Spring LDAP's ContextSource
.
Unless you have special requirements, you will usually configure a
DefaultSpringSecurityContextSource
bean, which can be
configured with the URL of your LDAP server and optionally with the username and
password of a "manager" user which will be used by default when binding to the
server (instead of binding anonymously). For more information read the Javadoc for
this class and for Spring LDAP's AbstractContextSource
.
Often a more complicated strategy than simple DN-matching is required to locate a
user entry in the directory. This can be encapsulated in an
LdapUserSearch
instance which can be supplied to the
authenticator implementations, for example, to allow them to locate a user. The
supplied implementation is FilterBasedLdapUserSearch
.
This bean uses an LDAP filter to match the user object in the directory. The
process is explained in the Javadoc for the corresponding search method on the
JDK DirContext class. As explained there, the search filter can be
supplied with parameters. For this class, the only valid parameter is
{0}
which will be replaced with the user's login
name.
After authenticating the user successfully, the
LdapAuthenticationProvider
will attempt to load a set of
authorities for the user by calling the configured
LdapAuthoritiesPopulator
bean. The
DefaultLdapAuthoritiesPopulator
is an implementation which
will load the authorities by searching the directory for groups of which the user is
a member (typically these will be groupOfNames
or
groupOfUniqueNames
entries in the directory). Consult the Javadoc
for this class for more details on how it works.
If you want to use LDAP only for authentication, but load the authorities from a difference source (such as a database) then you can provide your own implementation of this interface and inject that instead.
A typical configuration, using some of the beans we've discussed here, might look like this:
<bean id="contextSource" class="org.springframework.security.ldap.DefaultSpringSecurityContextSource"> <constructor-arg value="ldap://monkeymachine:389/dc=springframework,dc=org"/> <property name="userDn" value="cn=manager,dc=springframework,dc=org"/> <property name="password" value="password"/> </bean> <bean id="ldapAuthProvider" class="org.springframework.security.ldap.authentication.LdapAuthenticationProvider"> <constructor-arg> <bean class="org.springframework.security.ldap.authentication.BindAuthenticator"> <constructor-arg ref="contextSource"/> <property name="userDnPatterns"> <list><value>uid={0},ou=people</value></list> </property> </bean> </constructor-arg> <constructor-arg> <bean class="org.springframework.security.ldap.userdetails.DefaultLdapAuthoritiesPopulator"> <constructor-arg ref="contextSource"/> <constructor-arg value="ou=groups"/> <property name="groupRoleAttribute" value="ou"/> </bean> </constructor-arg> </bean>
This would set up the provider to access an LDAP server
with URL ldap://monkeymachine:389/dc=springframework,dc=org
.
Authentication will be performed by attempting to bind with the DN
uid=<user-login-name>,ou=people,dc=springframework,dc=org
.
After successful authentication, roles will be assigned to the user by searching
under the DN ou=groups,dc=springframework,dc=org
with the default
filter (member=<user's-DN>)
. The role name will be taken
from the “ou” attribute of each match.
To configure a user search object, which uses the filter
(uid=<user-login-name>)
for use instead of the DN-pattern
(or in addition to it), you would configure the following bean
<bean id="userSearch" class="org.springframework.security.ldap.search.FilterBasedLdapUserSearch"> <constructor-arg index="0" value=""/> <constructor-arg index="1" value="(uid={0})"/> <constructor-arg index="2" ref="contextSource" /> </bean>
and use it by setting the
BindAuthenticator
bean's userSearch
property. The authenticator would then call the search object to obtain the correct
user's DN before attempting to bind as this user.
The net result of an authentication using
LdapAuthenticationProvider
is the same as a normal Spring
Security authentication using the standard
UserDetailsService
interface. A
UserDetails
object is created and stored in the
returned Authentication
object. As with using a
UserDetailsService
, a common requirement is to be
able to customize this implementation and add extra properties. When using LDAP,
these will normally be attributes from the user entry. The creation of the
UserDetails
object is controlled by the provider's
UserDetailsContextMapper
strategy, which is
responsible for mapping user objects to and from LDAP context data:
public interface UserDetailsContextMapper { UserDetails mapUserFromContext(DirContextOperations ctx, String username, Collection<GrantedAuthority> authorities); void mapUserToContext(UserDetails user, DirContextAdapter ctx); }
Only the first method is relevant for authentication. If you
provide an implementation of this interface and inject it into the
LdapAuthenticationProvider
, you have control over exactly how
the UserDetails object is created. The first parameter is an instance of Spring
LDAP's DirContextOperations
which gives you access to
the LDAP attributes which were loaded during authentication. The
username
parameter is the name used to authenticate and the final
parameter is the collection of authorities loaded for the user by the configured
LdapAuthoritiesPopulator
.
The way the context data is loaded varies slightly depending on the type of
authentication you are using. With the BindAuthenticator
, the
context returned from the bind operation will be used to read the attributes,
otherwise the data will be read using the standard context obtained from the
configured ContextSource
(when a search is configured
to locate the user, this will be the data returned by the search object).
Active Directory supports its own non-standard authentication options, and the normal usage pattern
doesn't fit too cleanly with the standard LdapAuthenticationProvider
.
Typically authentication is performed using the domain username (in the form user@domain
),
rather than using an LDAP distinguished name. To make this easier, Spring Security 3.1 has an
authentication provider which is customized for a typical Active Directory setup.
Configuring ActiveDirectoryLdapAuthenticationProvider
is
quite straightforward. You just need to supply the domain name and an LDAP URL
supplying the address of the server [24]. An example configuration would then look like this:
<bean id="adAuthenticationProvider" class="org.springframework.security.ldap.authentication.ad.ActiveDirectoryLdapAuthenticationProvider"> <constructor-arg value="mydomain.com" /> <constructor-arg value="ldap://adserver.mydomain.com/" /> </bean> }
Note that there is no need to specify a separate
ContextSource
in order to define the server location - the bean
is completely self-contained. A user named “Sharon”, for example, would
then be able to authenticate by entering either the username
sharon
or the full Active Directory
userPrincipalName
, namely [email protected]
.
The user's directory entry will then be located, and the attributes returned for
possible use in customizing the created UserDetails
object (a UserDetailsContextMapper
can be injected
for this purpose, as described above). All interaction with the directory takes
place with the identity of the user themselves. There is no concept of a
“manager” user.
By default, the user authorities are obtained from the memberOf
attribute values of the user entry. The authorities allocated to the user can again
be customized using a UserDetailsContextMapper
. You
can also inject a GrantedAuthoritiesMapper
into the
provider instance to control the authorities which end up in the
Authentication
object.
By default, a failed result will cause a standard Spring Security
BadCredentialsException
. If you set the property
convertSubErrorCodesToExceptions
to true
,
the exception messages will be parsed to attempt to extract the Active
Directory-specific error code and raise a more specific exception. Check the
class Javadoc for more information.